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unicorn
Lyon Cathedral
Philip the Fair
Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes
Frederick Barbarossa
Cathédrale Saint-Jean-Baptiste
Frederick II
Gothic
Lyon
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Mary de Medici
Physiologus


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Lyon - Cathédrale Saint-Jean-Baptiste

Lyon - Cathédrale Saint-Jean-Baptiste
Colonia Copia Claudia Augusta Lugdunum (now Lyon) was an important Roman city in Gaul. It was the capital of the Roman province of Gallia Lugdunensis. The Christianization took place very early.
In 177, the Christian community sent a letter naming 48 of their number who had been martyred. In 843 it was ceded to Lorraine and then passed to the Kingdom of Burgundy, whose dominion was entrusted to the Archbishop of Lyon by Frederick Barbarossa in 1157. In 1312 Philip the Fair incorporated Lyon into the kingdom of France.
Lyon was the scene of an urban revolt in 1436 when Charles VII increased taxation. The uprising, mainly of small merchants, lasted a total of two months. During the reign of Louis XI. Four fairs were set up, attracting merchants from all over Europe, especially Italy. Lyon became an important center for the spice trade and, more importantly, the silk trade after François I granted the weaving rights, which until then had been an Italian monopoly. Florentine immigrants also made Lyon a financial center for banking and insurance.
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It is often said that the most beautiful cities are located on rivers. Lyon is situated on two rivers, the Rhone and the Saone, which meet in the south of the city.
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The Lyon Cathedral was begun in 1180 on the ruins of a 6th-century church and completed in 1476.

In 1245, the church hosted the First Council of Lyon, where the Pope declared Emperor Frederick II deposed. In 1274, the Second Council of Lyon was held in the cathedral, mainly to discuss the union of the Catholic Church with the Greek Orthodox. On August 17, 1316, John XXII was elected pope in the cathedral. He was the second of the Avignon popes.

In 1562 the church was devastated by Calvinist Huguenots. In 1600 the cathedral was the scene of the marriage between King Henry IV and Mary de Medici.

The facade from the 14th and 15th centuries is influenced by the flamboyant Gothic style.

Unicorns were a very rare species in medieval times. And they still are. Here I found two.

The "Physiologus," an originally Greek scripture written in the 2nd to 4th centuries is an important text of Christianity. Repeatedly copied and translated, the Physiologus is a work that combines Greek natural history with Christian teachings. In the Physiologus, the unicorn is described as a timid creature that can only be tamed by a pure virgin (= Virgin Mary). A type of image emerges in various forms, with one depiction of the Virgin Mary with a unicorn standing out in particular: Mary sits in an enchanted garden, surrounded by wild nature. A unicorn approaches her and bows its horned head on her lap.

Paolo Tanino has particularly liked this photo


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